Last (x) movies you saw (II)

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July:

Dr. Phibes Rises Again (Fuest, 1972) 6/10
Kelly's Heroes (Hutton, 1970) 6/10
Don't Panic Chaps! (Pollock, 1959) 4/10
Martin (Romero, 1977) 8/10
Detour (Ulmer, 1945) 8/10
Blue Collar (Schrader, 1978) 8/10
The Mummy's Ghost (Le Borg, 1944) 4/10
The Case of the Bloody Iris (Carnimeo, 1972) 7/10
City Hunter (Wong, 1993) 4/10
The Forbidden Photos of a Lady Above Suspicion (Ercoli, 1970) 6/10
The Flavour of Green Tea Over Rice (Ozu, 1952) 9/10
Dressed to Kill (De Palma, 1980) 7/10
The Night Stalker (Moxey, 1972) 7/10
The Body Beneath (Milligan, 1970) 8/10
Intolerance: Love's Struggle Throughout the Ages (Griffith, 1916) 8/10
A Weekend With Lulu (Carstairs, 1961) 5/10
Night and Fog (Resnais, 1956)
Bob & Carol & Ted * Alice (Mazursky, 1969) 7/10
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (Werker, 1939) 7/10
Funeral in Berlin (Hamilton, 1966) 6/10
The Satanic Rites of Dracula (Gibson, 1973) 6/10
Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror (Rawlins, 1942) 6/10
Eaten Alive! (Lenzi, 1980)

Ward Fowler, Saturday, 1 August 2020 13:09 (three years ago) link

The Parallax View, one of my favorite 1970s movies.

but also fuck you (unperson), Saturday, 1 August 2020 13:39 (three years ago) link

City Hunter has the worst signal-to-noise in astonishing action pieces patched together by the flimsiest acting/plot.

Elvis Telecom, Sunday, 2 August 2020 05:40 (three years ago) link

It was all the terrible 'comedy' that killed City Hunter for me, though the Street Fighter parody is indeed all kinds of wtf

Ward Fowler, Sunday, 2 August 2020 17:38 (three years ago) link

oh it's all time
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wBsajdIZf74

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Sunday, 2 August 2020 18:16 (three years ago) link

The Lady Who Dared (Beaudine, 1931)
A Girl in Every Port (Hawks, 1928)
Just a Pain in the Parlor (Marshall, 1932)
Tartuffe (Murnau, 1925)
The Racketeer (Higgin, 1929)
*Werewolf of London (Walker, 1935)
Pep Up (Martin, 1929)
Love's Young Scream (Watson, 1928)
*Fluttering Hearts (Parrott, 1927)

Life is a banquet and my invitation was lost in the mail (j.lu), Sunday, 2 August 2020 20:41 (three years ago) link

The Go-Go's (2020) 3.5/5
Soleil Ô (1967) 3.5/5
* The Swimmer (1968) 3.5/5
Showbiz Kids (2020) 3/5
* Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives (2010) 4/5
First Cow (2020) 3.5/5
* Pope of Greenwich Village (1984) 2.5/5
* My Darling Clementine (1946) 5/5

Chris L, Monday, 3 August 2020 14:07 (three years ago) link

We watched "Out of the Past" last night. It had been a while, but as soon as it started I excitedly told my daughter, "wait, this movie has one of the most ridiculous on-screen deaths in movie history!" So every time someone was shot she'd look at me and ask "was that it?" and I'd say "no, you'll know it when you see it." And then it finally happens, toward the end, and she turns to me and just says "oh, ok, that's it."

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 3 August 2020 14:30 (three years ago) link

1) I've hardly watched any films the past couple of months--been rewatching my favourite TV shows.

2) I had to have my operating system reinstalled a few weeks ago, so I lost the document where I kept track (for this thread) of what I'd recently seen. So this is from memory, going back weeks, and missing a few films.

The Big Heat (8.0)
In a Lonely Place (7.5)
Hillary (6.5)
Jeffrey Epstein: Filthy Rich (6.0)
Vamps (5.0)
Almost Famous (7.5)
Ghost World (8.0)
Absence of Malice (7.5)
First Cow (6.0)

clemenza, Tuesday, 4 August 2020 02:35 (three years ago) link

there are no ridiculous deaths in Out of the Past

brooklyn suicide cult (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 4 August 2020 02:48 (three years ago) link

you must've been thinking of Haneke's Amour

brooklyn suicide cult (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 4 August 2020 02:49 (three years ago) link

Devil’s Doorway (A. Mann, 1950) 8/10
Washington Merry-Go-Round (Cruze, 1932) 6/10
*The Strawberry Blonde (Walsh, 1941) 8/10
Moonlight on the Highway (MacTaggart/Potter, TV, 1969) 7/10
Silver Lode (Dwan, 1954) 8/10
Cowboy (Daves, 1958) 7/10
Cynara (K. Vidor, 1932) 7/10
*Dinner at Eight (Cukor, 1933) 9/10
Stella Dallas (King, 1925) 8/10
The Given Word (Duarte, 1962) 7/10
Grand Prix (Frankenheimer, 1966) 7/10
*The Champ (K. Vidor, 1931) 8/10

brooklyn suicide cult (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 8 August 2020 01:26 (three years ago) link

*They All Laughed (Bogdanovich, 1981) - 10/10
Belly (Williams, 1998) - 9/10
*Symbiopsychotaxiplasm: Take One (Greaves, 1968) - 10/10
Hilda Crane (Dunne, 1956) - 7/10
The Last Temptation of Christ (Scorsese, 1988) - 9/10
Night Moves (Penn, 1975) - 7/10
Underworld U.S.A. (Fuller, 1961) - 8/10
Le Notti Bianche (Visconti, 1957) - 8/10
One Day Since Yesterday: Peter Bogdanovich & the Lost American Film (Teck, 2014) - 8/10
The Hot Rock (Yates, 1972) - 7/10
Swept Away (Wertmüller, 1974) - 9/10
Hell and High Water (Fuller, 1954) - 7/10
Hussy (Chapman, 1980) - 7/10
The Love Witch (Biller, 2016) - 8/10
Brutal Tales of Chivalry (Saeki, 1965) - 7/10
Key Largo (Huston, 1949) - 7/10
The Whistleblower (Kondracki, 2010) - 6/10
Park Row (Fuller, 1952) - 9/10
Bluebeard’s Eighth Wife (Lubitsch, 1938) - 8/10
Mandabi (Sembène, 1968) - 8/10
Good Will Hunting (Van Sant, 1997) - 7/10
*The Third Generation (Fassbinder, 1979) - 10/10
Mr. Jones (Holland, 2019) - 6/10
The Letter (Wyler, 1940) - 8/10
Mean Johnny Barrows (Williamson, 1976) - 7/10
Meet Me in St. Louis (Minnelli, 1944) - 10/10
The Hospital (Hiller, 1971) - 5/10
*Senso (Visconti, 1954) - 8/10
Viva (Biller, 2007) - 7/10
The Horse Soldiers (Ford, 1959) - 8/10
Let’s Make Love (Cukor, 1960) - 7/10
*Johnny Guitar (Ray, 1954) - 9/10

Scorsese Shorts:
—What’s a Nice Girl Like You Doing in a Place Like This? - 9/10
—It’s Not Just You, Murray! - 7/10
—The Big Shave - 9/10
—Italianamerican - 9/10
—American Boy - 7/10

flappy bird, Saturday, 8 August 2020 03:29 (three years ago) link

I watch a film a day for the most part. today I saw Cat On a Hot Tin Roof. It's hard to imagine how you all could see so many more films than me. I'm in awe of your lists

Dan S, Saturday, 8 August 2020 03:49 (three years ago) link

More television than films for me in the past two weeks, but here's what i got.

Great:
Short Films of Charley Bowers - 1927 to 1935
Word Is Out: Stories of Some of Our Lives (Mariposa Film Group, 1977)
The Legend of Drunken Master (1994, Chia-Liang – Hadn't seen this in twenty year, boy does it ever hold up!)

Consistently Pretty Good to Very Very Good:
All I Can Say (Hoon, 2020)
Cunningham (Kovgan, 2020)
Trust Us, This Is All Made Up (Karpovsky, 2009)
Too Funny To Fail (Greenbaum, 2017)

Almost Okay to Occasionally Pretty Good:
The Indian Tomb (Lang, 1960)
Fist of Fury (Wei, 1972)

No:
Vanilla (Dennis, 2019)
The Disappearance of My Mother (2019, Barrese)

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Saturday, 8 August 2020 23:53 (three years ago) link

is legend of drunken Master drunken Master 2?

Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 8 August 2020 23:55 (three years ago) link

yah

Steppin' RZA (sic), Sunday, 9 August 2020 00:06 (three years ago) link

yep. goddamn, the fight sequences in drunken master are jaw dropping 25 years later. The story is near gibberish of course, but i didn't come here for the conversation.

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Sunday, 9 August 2020 04:14 (three years ago) link

I've been showing my kids Jackie Chan fights the last few months, actually. They were really amazed. Lots of "wait, didn't that hurt?" And me saying yeah, it probably did, let me fast-forward to the outtakes at the end.

Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 9 August 2020 13:22 (three years ago) link

The Way of Youth (Walker, 1934)
The Erl King (Iribe, 1931)
Night in Montmartre (Hiscott, 1931)
The Good Bad Boy (Cline, 1924)
Creature With the Atom Brain (Cahn, 1955)
Her First Kiss (Griffin, 1919)
*The Goat (Keaton & St. Clair, 1921)

Infanta Terrible (j.lu), Sunday, 9 August 2020 21:25 (three years ago) link

Elevator to the Gallows (Malle, 1958) 7/10
7 mainly for Jeanne Moreau and the cinematography of Henri Decaë, especially when she's wandering around in it, later and later, still waiting for/wondering what to do without her war-tested Action Man boyfriend, who was sent to kill his boss, her husband ("an arms dealer and an asshole," as another veteran, old colleague of bf puts it). Bf can't get back to her, he's stuck in an elevator---but somebody saw his fancy car taking off, so assumed the driver was him, with a teen babe who works across from his office (actually it was her, but the guy was *her* boyfriend, a juvenile or arrested-development delinquent). Bf's old acquaintance observes that he was always a shit with women; Moreau gets this mirthless leer, twisting the despair that don't look new---she's great as ever.
But otherwise, the somewhat promising critique of possibly movie-damaged wannabeeism, (no doubt about the b couple, who haplessly settle into Romance on the Run, going for Nicholas Ray etc.(and prob Action Man and Moreau's character, livin' the noir even more than she bargained for) is detached and plotty, begging comparison to Godard especially, who leaves Malle in the dust, at least here.
It's watchable enough, but from now on, think I'll stick to my old Miles Davis soundtrack, which works better as an album---especially considering the way music is used to heavily underscore the already and atypically overdone final scene; gimme detachment after all.

dow, Sunday, 9 August 2020 22:28 (three years ago) link

I was very happy that my daughter enjoyed "Predator." She (correctly) finds Arnold innately hilarious and entertaining.

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 10 August 2020 12:42 (three years ago) link

i watched elevator to the gallows really recently and i can't remember a single thing about it!

plax (ico), Tuesday, 11 August 2020 20:38 (three years ago) link

The Champ (Vidor, 1931)
*North by Northwest (Hitchcock, 1959)
Black Orpheus (Camus, 1959)
The Irishman (Scorsese, 2019)
Doctor Sleep (Flanagan, 2019)
*Psycho (Hitchcock, 1960)
Sidewalk Stories (Lane, 1989)
Knives Out (Johnson, 2019)
Marriage Story (Baumbach, 2019)
In Fabric (Strickland, 2018)

A White, White Gay (cryptosicko), Wednesday, 12 August 2020 18:37 (three years ago) link

Black and Tan (Murphy, 1929)
Why Change Your Wife? (De Mille, 1920)
Such Men Are Dangerous (K. Hawks, 1930)
Shoe Palace Pinkus (Lubitsch, 1916)
Astronomeous (Messmer, 1928)
The Young Rajah (Rosen, 1922)
Safety in Numbers (Schertzinger, 1930)
Indiscreet (McCarey, 1931)
Rome Express (Forde, 1932)
Punch the Clock (Beaudine, 1922)
Waiting at the Church (Lyons & Moran, 1919)
The Cure (Chaplin, 1917)

Infanta Terrible (j.lu), Sunday, 16 August 2020 23:44 (three years ago) link

Day of the Outlaw (1959) 4/5
The Baron of Arizona (1950) 3/5
What's Up, Doc? (1972) 4/5
La Belle Noiseuse (1991) 5/5
* Dressed to Kill (1980) 3/5
Dirty Ho (1979) 3/5

Shorts:
Cosmic Ray (Connor, 1962)
Pinball (Pitt, 2013)
Last Days in a Lonely Place; Rehearsals for Retirement (Solomon)

Chris L, Monday, 17 August 2020 12:15 (three years ago) link

Love Malle’s documentaries and his American outings like “Atlantic City” but I never thought he was even remotely in the same league as, say, Truffaut. Much less Godard. His French features, with a couple of exceptions, always felt they were missing a core *something*.

SQUIRREL MEAT!! (Capitaine Jay Vee), Monday, 17 August 2020 13:05 (three years ago) link

*felt like

SQUIRREL MEAT!! (Capitaine Jay Vee), Monday, 17 August 2020 13:05 (three years ago) link

I prefer Malle's soft generosity to Truffaut's suffocating sentimentalism

flappy bird, Monday, 17 August 2020 17:43 (three years ago) link

I made a note to check out Malle's "Le Fou Jollet" - I read a piece on In a Year with 13 Moons that claimed RWF "remade" Malle's film (???)

flappy bird, Monday, 17 August 2020 17:44 (three years ago) link

If Lucy Fell (Schaeffer, 1996) - 6/10
Whirlpool (Preminger, 1949) - 7/10
Pin Up Girl (Humberstone, 1944) - 8/10
Angels with Dirty Faces (Curtiz, 1938) - 7/10
*Death to Smoochy (DeVito, 2002) - 10/10
Boyz N the Hood (Singleton, 1991) - 8/10
She Dies Tomorrow (Seimetz, 2020) - 5/10

Psychomania (Sharp, 1973) - 6/10
Ninotchka (Lubitsch, 1939) - 9/10
*Casablanca (Curtiz, 1942) - 10/10
Hatari! (Hawks, 1962) - 5/10
Bulworth (Beatty, 1998) - 9/10
Where the Sidewalk Ends (Preminger, 1950) - 8/10
In the Realm of the Senses (Oshima, 1976) - 9/10
Modesty Blaise (Losey, 1966) - 7/10
I Could Go On Singing (Neame, 1963) - 7/10
*Taste of Cherry (Kiarostami, 1997) - 10/10
*Sorcerer (Friedkin, 1977) - 7/10
The Parallax View (Pakula, 1974) - 10/10
Primal Fear (Hoblit, 1996) - 9/10
Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (Tashlin, 1957) - 7/10
Here Comes Mr. Jordan (Hall, 1941) - 9/10
Spree (Kotlyarenko, 2020) - 9/10 <--------------- best new movie of the year
Cutter’s Way (Passer, 1981) - 7/10
The Outlaw (Hughes/Hawks, 1943) - 6/10
Super Fly (Parks Jr., 1972) - 7/10
*Pleasure Party (Chabrol, 1975) - 9/10
*Querelle (Fassbinder, 1982) - 7/10
They Were Expendable (Ford/Montgomery, 1945) - 8/10
Drive, He Said (Nicholson, 1971) - 5/10

flappy bird, Friday, 21 August 2020 04:40 (three years ago) link

Death to Smoochy 10/10

expand?

erratic wolf angular guitarist (sic), Friday, 21 August 2020 04:54 (three years ago) link

Death To Smoochy’s great iirc

sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Friday, 21 August 2020 05:06 (three years ago) link

a quick search of ilx answers shows most of us who are familiar with the material seem to agree

sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Friday, 21 August 2020 05:13 (three years ago) link

does it show why flappy bird in particular has historically rated it 10/10?

erratic wolf angular guitarist (sic), Friday, 21 August 2020 05:25 (three years ago) link

I cannot answer for flappy bird but probably the songs

sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Friday, 21 August 2020 05:27 (three years ago) link

One of the best corporate media satires ever made

flappy bird, Friday, 21 August 2020 05:31 (three years ago) link

I remember quite clearly the way Edward Norton had a terrible bachelor-with-clippers home haircut in every scene

sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Friday, 21 August 2020 05:36 (three years ago) link

imo DeVito does a great job with the tone, balancing the earnest desire to entertain that various characters have (not just the naivete of Norton), the bleakness of business, and the almost-sweaty desperateness of nearly everyone involved, but both the satire and the plot reverses are fairly by the book

erratic wolf angular guitarist (sic), Friday, 21 August 2020 06:02 (three years ago) link

if you folks aren't down with cinephobe yet: http://cinephobe.tv/

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Saturday, 22 August 2020 14:05 (three years ago) link

I prefer Malle's soft generosity to Truffaut's suffocating sentimentalism

― flappy bird, Monday, August 17, 2020

That's why Au Revoir, Mes Enfants is my least favorite of his major films -- it played like A Walk Through Truffautland. Otherwise, yeah, Elevator to the Galoows, The Fire Within, Murmur of the Heart, Lacombe, Lucien, Atlantic City, Vanya on 42nd Street -- what a filmography.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 22 August 2020 14:17 (three years ago) link

Agreed, tho I'd chuck Murmur as well for similar reasons. and I haven't seen Vanya!

flappy bird, Sunday, 23 August 2020 04:54 (three years ago) link

J-U-N-K (1920)
Sissy-Boy Slap-Party (Maddin, 2004)
One Man Law (Hillyer, 1932)
Twin Husbands (Strayer, 1933)
Whose Baby Are You? (Horne, 1925)
The Affairs of Anatol (De Mille, 1921)
The Curse of Frankenstein (Fisher, 1957)
The Simp (Davis & Roche, 1920)
*The Waiters' Ball (Arbuckle, 1916)

Infanta Terrible (j.lu), Sunday, 23 August 2020 21:07 (three years ago) link

Live Flesh (Almodovar, 1997)
Dragon Inn (Hu, 1967)
A Touch of Zen (Hu, 1971)
Awaara (Raj Kapoor, 1951)
The Portuguese Woman (Gomes, 2018)
Something in the Air (Assayas, 2012)
Gumnaam (Nawathe, 1965)
The Invicibles (Graf, 1994)
Girlhood (Sciamma, 2014)

xyzzzz__, Monday, 24 August 2020 22:46 (three years ago) link

A Touch of Zen is unclassifiable, sorta begins very Antonioni-like but it goes places I've never seen before.

Worth watching Something in the Air as a follow-up to Carlos...probably his finest period. And Girlhood is the one Sciamma I hadn't seen, just classics all round.

xyzzzz__, Monday, 24 August 2020 22:54 (three years ago) link

"Avalon", Mamoru Oshii's Polish-language Japanese science fiction film from 2001 was interesting I thought. The entire film was shot in various shades of sepia, the sets were extremely Eastern-European gothic, and the story had a quaint early 20th Century online datedness (like a more primitive Southland Tales) that was appealing

Dan S, Tuesday, 25 August 2020 06:58 (three years ago) link

IN Like Flint
James Coburn as the titular hero in a spoof james Bond film from 1967. He looks good for the most part apart from being a major stan for the patriarchy. BUT yeah that does slightly massively seem to be a problem with this film about women trying to take over the world and having to face this playboy type and a male heirarchy that seem sto have very few women in.
Assume that must be a major turn off for a lot of people, ruins the lighthearted fun. probably true.
I know i saw this a few decades ago as well as the first one. So watched this when i found it while channel surfing. Not sure how well dean martin's Matt Helm stands up at the moment assume it must suffer from the same thing. Probably wasn't as 'cool' to start off with anyway.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 25 August 2020 09:02 (three years ago) link

was trying to remember what the other film I saw thsi week was, now see why.

Pirates of Th e carribean Dead Mans Tails

The last of the series so far i think. Will Turner's son is one of the 2 protagonists as well as a female lead who doesn't know who her parents were,.
Doesn't seem to be quite embodied i the way that earlier films were. Possibly starting with the pointless band heist though possibly there's something even earlier.
A little naff possibly. BUt I thought I might as well watch it through while i was doing other things. think I ate at the same time and stuff. So I guess I only half watcheda lot of it.
BUt do hope they don't add another sequel.
Also I don't see any chemistry between the 2 protagonists which i think was supposed to be a running thread through the film. NOt enough just to say she blushed throughout. Cos what ain't there ain't there.
Still bet there is another one along with them as the starring couple.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 25 August 2020 10:02 (three years ago) link

I enjoyed most of the Malle movies I've seen, but thought that for instance Goodbye, Children was better than Murmurs of the Heart probably because the former stayed close to historical events as he reportedly witnessed them, while Murmur went from his own experiences to the son and his mama actually doin' it, which he's said was the made-up part, and not in the original plan for the movie, which wasn't really ready for something that deep, however brief---just seemed like the mechanism of the movie trundling along 'til it hit a big bump, then got back on course. Which goes with my take on xpost Ascension as promising themes falling into plotty detachment, when Moreau wasn't on screen, anyway. Ditto for Zasie in the Metro, which looked great right off, but couldn't even finish that one. Maybe I'll give these another shot eventually.
(That's the main prob I have with movies, when I have one: that distracting sense of the machinery, contivance involved, and scenes timed with a stopwatch---not that big a ratio of these to the good ones in Malle's filmography, but it can be frustrating when it happens.)

dow, Tuesday, 25 August 2020 23:38 (three years ago) link

New "Phineas and Ferb" movie is 10 times better than the new "Bill and Ted" movie, which is inexcusably ten times worse than the new "Phineas and Ferb" movie.

Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 30 August 2020 01:33 (three years ago) link


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